词汇 | example_english_distress |
释义 | Examples of distressThese examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. Anxious/resistant attachment is characterized by difficulty settling with the caregiver when distressed, often tinged with anger. The daily coherence rating reflected the consistency of a child's attachment behaviors each day across the three distressing situations in the diary. The story remains as distressing for the nineteenth-century households. We can all cite distressing examples of the failures of systems and of workers to respond in a timely and appropriate way. According to a perception-action theory of empathy, the subject is distressed because the state of the object is imparted to him directly. Do they find it distressing when art museums fail to hang pictures of brains on their walls? The offence is not designed to penalise the expressions of opinion that happen to be disagreeable, distasteful, or even offensive, annoying or distressing. The general practitioner is a first port of call for people with all manner of distressing circumstances. Because such potentially distressing events are predictable, but unavoidable, they are an ideal focus for an investigation of coping behaviours. The considerable costs of her earlier treatment had been futile, distressing, and wasteful. Fears about travel were not only distressing but were also the main factor limiting the children's social activities and relationships with friends. The presence of auditory hallucinations in non-help-seeking community samples emphasizes that the experience of voices per se may not or may not be distressing. I knew how to respond to the statements distressed patients frequently say when confronted with difficult circumstances. Even so, over one third of patients were depressed and one out of four carers was distressed. Participants (patients and controls) were not distressed when listening to the distorted or alien feedback, but usually described it as an unusual experience. The poem explores the reaction to the disturbing, distressing photographic images. The men who repeatedly brought up past events throughout their scenarios were visibly distressed. The men in this group also seemed particularly regretful of 'rectifying ' distressing past events but hopeful of rectification. Not all infants cry in response to separation or are distressed. Individuals with secure working models trust that attachment figures will provide a safe haven with comfor t and suppor t when the child feels distressed. When children who are easily aroused and distressed also anticipate hostility and rejection in social interactions, their response may be aggressive or destructive. In contrast, the assessment may have had less impact on distressing behaviours other than depression, which were less amenable to treatment. With increased inhibition, the subject can avoid becoming contagiously distressed from the object. However, as a side- effect it is persistent, distressing and a frequent cause of withdrawal. Many of these individuals gradually restructure their environnement, develop compensatory strategies, and are not particularly distressed by relatively modest memory impairments. The customers will know if the governance of the market is distressed. Admission to an inpatient hospice and dy ing there may become a necessary and appropr iate solution to distressing patients or exhausted families. No significant differences were found in the change in distressing pain by transition of care. Being younger, having a past history of depression, and continuing to be distressed by body image change are associated with developing a psychiatric disorder. In conclusion, a major ity of patients with delir ium recall their delir ium as highly distressing. Their popular books distressed religious conservatives by making it seem that physiology was reinforcing atheistic materialism. Often such patients' condition seems more distressing to relatives and caregivers than to the patients themselves. They also wanted more contact with the co-ordinators and with other volunteers as a way of coping with difficult and distressing calls. When such vaults are distressed, however, they may finally reveal the secrets of their construction by their patterns of cracks. However, it is just an illusion of lightness since buildings present heavy and distressing inenarrable tales. Individuals with dementia were often highly distressed at having to leave home, for either respite or day care. Examination revealed evidence of cardiac failure, with tachycardia and tachypnea, the child being distressed but not cyanosed. If distressed, they are soothed by the parent and can return to play. However, some of the enforced dependency may be frustrating, distressing, and unnecessary. In addition, our evidence suggests that it is responsive to placebo or possibly natural history (subjects may volunteer when fatigue is more distressing). Clinicians often face the dilemma of knowing where to start and what to do in treating this difficult, distressing psychological problem. Alternatively, the experience of unexpected pain/discomfort and/or the exposure to novel or distressing procedures may serve to generate anticipatory anxiety concerning subsequent visits. Many experienced as distressing this new picture of human grasping unleashed. I find it very distressing when you come to see someone who is breathless. With patients' agreement for referral, psychiatrists see patients and start treatments when patients were distressed with any psychiatric diagnoses. Improving the skills of doctors in giving distressing information. The children may also adjust to the distressing situation and may not consider it as bad as others do. Widespread ignorance about the workings of the social order may be distressing to one who values understanding for its own sake. There may be conflict between the family's ready assumption that the formerly intelligent sophisticate feels most distressed in the intellectual decline of dementia. To be cut off from this feed stock during the height of his productive hours would be distressing. Overall, it appears that patients in primary health care present with psychological symptoms mostly when their current level of depressive symptoms is distressing. During one of these sessions, the father was noticeably fatigued and distressed and reported that he was not sleeping at night. One can postulate that the consoling individual has become distressed from the sight of the victim and seeks comfort for his or her own feelings. Greatly distressed, the emperor begged the saints to help him once again and in response the saints wrote another message to the cobbler. The evening sessions were often particularly distressing, and could last for several hours. High scores on this scale reflected the use of one type of attachment behavior across different distressing events. On the contrary, they may be children who stay "under the radar" and parents may not know when they are distressed. First, around one-half of the people with dementia that we observed were distressed by the enforced identities and reacted accordingly. 829 fect may be particularly distressing to those close to the young person. Is there a room for patients and partners who may be distressed? The patients were asked if they had planned the birth, if they wanted the birth and whether the pregnancy was distressing. They found being in an open ward with much older or much younger patients quite distressing. In sum, the five identified groups differed in the proportions distressed at and across the time-points. Importantly, participants with a ' mental disability ' did not find it either demeaning or distressing. The processes were sometimes distressing. Only one respondent remembered the death as having been "bad," although 62% of patients were recalled as having suffered distressing sy mptoms in their last days. Was the patient comfortable or distressed? Along the way, he is distressed to find that a number of his supposed allies, the neoclassical economists, comprise a fifth column within the anti-socialist camp. While carers acknowledged distressing changes in their spouse, a history of reciprocity and intimacy emerged, comprising positive themes and perceived continuity which favourably influenced adjustment to care-giving. In particular, the exact relationship between self-evaluated health and the management of distressing life events, as well as the social psychological regulation process itself, need further exploration. The crooners' sentimental repertory was cast, not as a healthy escape, but rather as a demoralising scourge, especially with the distressing war news of early 1942. Secondly, the alterations to the self of the person with dementia sometimes distressed the carer (even if he or she had been instrumental in the changes). Trying to build relationships in which a person can feel safe may be one of the most salient of interventions for people with this distressing disorder. Participants endorsed any events from this list that they had experienced, and also listed any "other" personal experiences that might have been particularly distressing or frightening. The development of serious and distressing inherited genetic diseases could be p r e v e n t e d before birth and eliminated in subsequent generations. Treating the peripheral oedema with a strong diuretic regime may be immensely distressing if the patient is in pain at every attempt to walk to a toilet. In sum, the deficient emotional processing of youth and adults with psychopathic traits is generally in response to negative emotional stimuli, and even more specifically in response to distressing stimuli. The resultant worship was too distressing. If a sense of mutuality has been created, so that the joys and distresses of an outgroup member foretell similar experiences for the observers, correlative outcomes transforms disempathy to empathy. However, two people were distressed by the lengths of time they had to wait for cardiac surgery following angiography at the time of their heart attack. The flattering acknowledgement of me as a 'song composer' distresses me to my innermost soul. She required moderate doses of opioids to keep her pain f ree, but these caused sedation, which was extremely distressing to both the patient and her husband. In particular, there is a wish to respond positively in situations where patients are critically ill, have distressing symptoms, or have a dreaded diagnosis (23, 865). Perhaps paradoxically, children often report that injections are less distressing when a parent is present although their overt expression of pain is greater when a parent is present. Emotional processing of distressing stimuli. We decided that it would be unprofessional and distressing to send her a recruitment letter, although she did not satisfy any of the of cial exclusion criteria. In other words, because distressing sociolinguistic conflict materializes in these market interactions of the second type, they provide a scenario that challenges standard principles that guide conversational exchanges. Strangely, this moving story of one individual coping in distressing circumstances puts into focus much of what we already know about the effects of industrialization and urbanization on social cohesion. The high burden of the disease and the poor prognosis means that many patients can feel too tired or distressed to engage in the study or are just not interested. Incontinence can be very distressing. As he became worse, she spent most of her time by his bed, and said she was distressed that she had not been there at the moment he died. The paper offers a reflective account of the management of recruitment and informed consent, and of the issues that arose when facilitating group discussions of potentially distressing material. A number of nurses recalled incidents where this discrepancy had been distressing for the patient and had led the nurse to feel that the quality of care was not optimum. What distresses me about our discussions of foreign affairs is that we become preoccupied with the short-term issues at the expense of long-term strategy. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 The distresses of the unemployed are themselves too keen to justify this deception, which is practised for mere vote-catching purposes. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 If anyone or anything is to blame it is a whole series of circumstances which distressed my predecessor as much as it distresses me. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 What distresses me most about age discrimination in employment is the appalling waste of older workers' talent and experience that it represents. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 They have not so far been received and this distresses me. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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